number_to_human
- 1.0.0
- 1.1.6
- 1.2.6
- 2.0.3
- 2.1.0
- 2.2.1
- 2.3.8
- 3.0.0
- 3.0.9
- 3.1.0
- 3.2.1
- 3.2.8
- 3.2.13
- 4.0.2 (0)
- 4.1.8 (0)
- 4.2.1 (8)
- 4.2.7 (0)
- 4.2.9 (0)
- 5.0.0.1 (1)
- 5.1.7 (0)
- 5.2.3 (0)
- 6.0.0 (0)
- 6.1.3.1 (12)
- 6.1.7.7 (0)
- 7.0.0 (0)
- 7.1.3.2 (-38)
- 7.1.3.4 (0)
- What's this?
number_to_human(number, options = {})
public
Pretty prints (formats and approximates) a number in a way it is more readable by humans (e.g.: 1200000000 becomes “1.2 Billion”). This is useful for numbers that can get very large (and too hard to read).
See number_to_human_size if you want to print a file size.
You can also define your own unit-quantifier names if you want to use other decimal units (e.g.: 1500 becomes “1.5 kilometers”, 0.150 becomes “150 milliliters”, etc). You may define a wide range of unit quantifiers, even fractional ones (centi, deci, mili, etc).
Options
-
:locale - Sets the locale to be used for formatting (defaults to current locale).
-
:precision - Sets the precision of the number (defaults to 3).
-
:round_mode - Determine how rounding is performed (defaults to :default. See BigDecimal::mode)
-
:significant - If true, precision will be the number of significant_digits. If false, the number of fractional digits (defaults to true)
-
:separator - Sets the separator between the fractional and integer digits (defaults to “.”).
-
:delimiter - Sets the thousands delimiter (defaults to “”).
-
:strip_insignificant_zeros - If true removes insignificant zeros after the decimal separator (defaults to true)
-
:units - A Hash of unit quantifier names. Or a string containing an i18n scope where to find this hash. It might have the following keys:
-
integers: :unit, :ten, :hundred, :thousand, :million, :billion, :trillion, :quadrillion
-
fractionals: :deci, :centi, :mili, :micro, :nano, :pico, :femto
-
-
:format - Sets the format of the output string (defaults to “%n %u”). The field types are:
-
%u - The quantifier (ex.: ‘thousand’)
-
%n - The number
-
Examples
number_to_human(123) # => "123" number_to_human(1234) # => "1.23 Thousand" number_to_human(12345) # => "12.3 Thousand" number_to_human(1234567) # => "1.23 Million" number_to_human(1234567890) # => "1.23 Billion" number_to_human(1234567890123) # => "1.23 Trillion" number_to_human(1234567890123456) # => "1.23 Quadrillion" number_to_human(1234567890123456789) # => "1230 Quadrillion" number_to_human(489939, precision: 2) # => "490 Thousand" number_to_human(489939, precision: 4) # => "489.9 Thousand" number_to_human(489939, precision: 2 , round_mode: :down) # => "480 Thousand" number_to_human(1234567, precision: 4, significant: false) # => "1.2346 Million" number_to_human(1234567, precision: 1, separator: ',', significant: false) # => "1,2 Million" number_to_human(500000000, precision: 5) # => "500 Million" number_to_human(12345012345, significant: false) # => "12.345 Billion"
Non-significant zeros after the decimal separator are stripped out by default (set :strip_insignificant_zeros to false to change that):
number_to_human(12.00001) # => “12” number_to_human(12.00001, strip_insignificant_zeros: false) # => “12.0”
Custom Unit Quantifiers
You can also use your own custom unit quantifiers:
number_to_human(500000, units: { unit: 'ml', thousand: 'lt' }) # => "500 lt"
If in your I18n locale you have:
distance: centi: one: "centimeter" other: "centimeters" unit: one: "meter" other: "meters" thousand: one: "kilometer" other: "kilometers" billion: "gazillion-distance"
Then you could do:
number_to_human(543934, units: :distance) # => "544 kilometers" number_to_human(54393498, units: :distance) # => "54400 kilometers" number_to_human(54393498000, units: :distance) # => "54.4 gazillion-distance" number_to_human(343, units: :distance, precision: 1) # => "300 meters" number_to_human(1, units: :distance) # => "1 meter" number_to_human(0.34, units: :distance) # => "34 centimeters"